Orlando Sentinel

Tex-Mex, meet Tex-Next

- Story and photos by Mark Johanson

SAN ANTONIO – My good friends Ariela and Elliot are longtime New Yorkers who fled the Big Apple for Austin two years ago, got priced out and ended up in San Antonio. It’s a common story these days.

When I meet up with them in San Antonio, along the hipster-y St. Mary’s Strip, I begin to understand why they chose this city 80 miles to the southwest.

Those hoping to “keep San Antonio lame” — a play on Austin’s “keep Austin weird” moniker — seem to be losing the battle, as quirky new bars and restaurant­s give Texas’ capital city a run for its money.

The three of us sip small batch mezcal and dine on jackfruit tacos at Chisme, then sit under the pink glow of neon lights at nearby Cullum’s Attagirl drinking Texan craft beer and eating gourmet fast food. We cap off the evening with late-night tacos from El Regio’s mustard-yellow taco truck.

This certainly isn’t the San Antonio of River Walk revelry and theme park ballyhooin­g you see in brochures. Instead, it’s the city an increasing number of non-Texans have discovered in recent years, as San Antonio sheds its families-only veneer and opens its arms to both millennial­s and cultural travelers.

Texas, as we know it, began in San Antonio, which is home to the (surprising­ly modest) Alamo and four other Spanish missions that, collective­ly, became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2015. Though it was historical­ly the Lone Star State’s largest city and top tourist draw, it long ago passed those crowns over to Houston and Austin, respective­ly. But San Antonio is revving up for a second coming, and there are plenty of reasons to visit.

For starters, San Antonio is celebratin­g its 300th birthday this year with a packed calendar of activities, including a weeklong tricentenn­ial event the first week in May. Two new riverside parks will open in 2018, as will the much-hyped Maverick Whiskey distillery in the restored Lockwood National Bank downtown.

I’ve come for yet another reason: to find out how such an inconspicu­ous city was just crowned a UNESCO Creative City of Gastronomy.

Hometown chef Johnny Hernandez was instrument­al in putting San Antonio on UNESCO’s radar, so we meet up to discuss the new designatio­n over Sunday brunch at his new Veracruz-style seafood restaurant, Villa Rica. The brightly hued eatery lies in the historic Southtown neighborho­od on the edge of a hip warehouse-cum-shopping complex known as Blue Star Arts.

“San Antonio has this great culinary history, but for years, we’ve been trying to figure out how to make people take us seriously,” Hernandez explains as we devour a crab taco, octopus tostadas and arroz a la tumbada, a paella-like bowl of rice and seafood. “There is so much focus on Tex-Mex and margaritas that I think it overshadow­s all the other efforts of the broader food community here.”

Hernandez, who has seven casual restaurant­s in town, says San Antonio is now pivoting from Tex-Mex to Tex-Next. “We’re working tirelessly to understand the roots of not only Mexican cuisine, but other cultures and influences that have shaped our local food,” including the area’s indigenous inhabitant­s, early Spanish colonizers and more recent German settlers.

If there’s one place that’s been instrument­al in changing the city’s culinary landscape, it’s the Pearl. This German brewery complex, built in 1883 on the northern edge of downtown, has completely transforme­d over the last decade into a 22-acre, 18restaura­nt-strong dining district helmed by the third outpost of the Culinary Institute of America. There’s also a sprawling weekend farmers market and, in the old bottling department, San Antonio’s first upscale food hall (think miso ramen, elderflowe­r doughnuts and gluten-free mac and cheese).

At the heart of the Pearl — occupying the former brewery’s brick shell — is Hotel Emma. Chef John Brand is Emma’s culinary director, and his American bistro, Supper, is a master class in restraint. It’s also refreshing­ly approachab­le. “Unlike Austin, in San Antonio you can’t write your menu for your ego,” Brand tells me of his no-nonsense approach to cooking. “People appreciate it here when you’re honest and straightfo­rward.”

Brand’s simple, honest flavors shine in minimalist dishes like the (four-ingredient) salt and vinegar Brussels sprouts, which are crisp and tangy, and the smoked Texas quail, whose crunchy morsels are served atop pickled corn relish.

Brand started his cooking career as a dishwasher in Wisconsin and moved to San Antonio 10 years ago. He thinks the Pearl complex has given the city a culinary core, while the UNESCO designatio­n offers it global recognitio­n.

“I hear a lot more accents in the dining room now,” he says.

Just around the corner from Supper, in Pearl Brewery’s old administra­tive offices, is the restaurant Cured, where I meet up with three-time James Beard Award nominee Steve McHugh. The name of his restaurant feels appropriat­e as I walk past cured meats hanging from hooks in the entryway. But there’s a hidden meaning.

“I’m a cancer survivor,” McHugh divulges over a lunch of charcuteri­e, noting how the disease informs the way he sources his products. “If I know where each animal comes from and I know that they’re being raised the right way, then I’m ingesting a healthy, happy animal instead of one that was grown in a barn, raised on concrete and injected full of hormones.”

McHugh uses every part of the animals he butchers at Cured. As we slather pickled cactus and spreadable salami onto a PBRinfused flatbread (McHugh is also a Wisconsini­te), he explains that every culture has its own form of curing, storing, fermenting or pickling. “What we’re doing is taking those techniques and putting them back in the forefront of a restaurant.”

I’d planned to avoid the famed River Walk, which my friends, the New York transplant­s, had called San Antonio’s Times Square. But on my final night in town, the lure of chef Michael Sohocki’s Restaurant Gwendolyn proved too difficult for the three of us to resist.

Sohocki cooks highly seasonal multicours­e meals using only items available before the Industrial Revolution. That means no mixers, deep fryers or anything with an electrical plug. We slurp a sweet and savory strawberry gazpacho, graze a plate of beet carpaccio in grapefruit vinaigrett­e and attack a charred tomahawk pork chop.

After a post-dinner walk through the streets of downtown, my friends ask what I make of their new home.

I tell them that it feels like a city on the move.

 ??  ?? The Pearl, a 19th-century brewery complex, is now a dining district.
The Pearl, a 19th-century brewery complex, is now a dining district.

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